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Trump’s terror policy calls for “extreme vetting”
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump says he will institute “extreme vetting” of immigrants and establish a new “commission on radical Islam” if he wins the U.S. election in November.
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Speaking in swing state Ohio, Trump also said his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton lacks the “mental and physical stamina” to take on the Islamic State. Vice President Joe Biden speaking at a campaign event with Hillary Clinton said that Mr Trump’s claim that Mr Obama and Mrs Clinton had “founded” IS proved his views to be “dangerous” and “un-American”, and that it had made USA soldiers in Iraq less safe already.
REPUBLICAN presidential candidate Donald Trump pursued his “Muslim scare” approach on Monday evening by pledging to introduce “extreme vetting” of immigrants seeking admission to the United States.
What’s to stop would-be malcontents from giving less than truthful answers during their “extreme vetting”?
Since Donald Trump called for temporarily banning Muslims from entering the US, he has tried to expand, narrow or otherwise redefine the polarizing proposal that helped win him the Republican primary but has posed a greater challenge in the general election campaign.
“Our current strategy of nation-building and regime change have been a total disaster – it’s time to chart a new course”, Trump said.
During that time, he said there were no “successful radical Islamic terrorist attacks inside the United States” before Obama started serving as president in January 2009.
While claiming that if elected, his administration would be a friend to all moderate Muslims, Trump reiterated his initiatives to temporarily suspend visas from Muslim-majority countries and countries with a history of exporting terrorism. Yesterday, Trump not only pretended he never held those positions, he also blamed these policies for contributing to the rise of ISIS.
The senior campaign official declined to say exactly what such a test would look like, but said it could include a questionnaire to get potential immigrants on record about their views.
Any country which shares this goal will be Washington’s ally, according to Trump.
In his second major policy address in recent weeks, Donald Trump delivered a sound and sensible approach to defeating ISIS – once and for all – in a national security speech in OH, a key swing state.
While Trump mentioned Syria and Iran as enemies of America, he said that if elected president he would ask the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security to create a list of regions “where adequate screening can not take place”.
Trump said he would convene an global conference and work with moderate Muslim leaders in the Middle East.
On the eve of the speech, the Clinton campaign slammed Trump’s campaign manager for ties to Russian Federation and pro-Kremlin interests, an apparent reference to a New York Times story published Sunday night. You wouldn’t have ISIS, and I’ve been saying that for years.
Donald Trump’s new campaign manager once made the case to Republicans that the party should embrace a comprehensive immigration bill and legal status for undocumented immigrants – differing sharply with the GOP candidate’s hardline stance on the issue.
Last week, when asked about the future of Guantanamo, he said that he would be “fine” with trying US citizens in military tribunals, which would violate federal law.
The Republican compared the battle to defeat the Islamic State (Isis) death cult with the Western struggle against communism during the cold war.
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But at a time when President Barack Obama is trying to close the detention centre, Trump pledged to keep it open.